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Actually, it’s a folk myth[de:].
The crazyshitness quota is quite high[de:] these days, as you have heard. If they will talk of the 21st century world revolution afterwards, we’re already in it. It is quite unlikely that this can be stomped out anytime soon. Particularly since the hottest years of this decade are yet to come (remember the temperature curve lags about one year after the radiation curve).
As a side note, 2013 is the year of the scheduled Federal elex. However, … read more
Picture is not that much related.
So… by now it should be clear theat the Greek Situation is dead serious.
No Flachs[de:]
The SocDems are doing perhaps the first major thing since long that looks like it might actually work, instead of making you think “ho hum, again? Prions or brain flukes, I wonder…”.
Which is to say they abstained when the Greece bailout bill was put on vote today[de:]. The Socialists went for an all-out Nay, as was expected. The Greens were … read more
Actually, no[de:].
They had been long Arified through and through, and as far as I can think of, entirely voluntarily. Certainly, not a single dirty smelly money-grabbing Jew had any major say about it even before the Nazis, and by 1945 it had itself completely whored[de:] out to the highest bidder.
They flaunt their Jew heritage, possibly because after haShoah, things Jewish have the attractiveness of things taboo in Germany. But I presume they were Catholic[de:] in “modern” times — if anything … read more
The People had enough at last.
They had been fed up for just too long. Despite all this grand populist BS from their exalted leadership — the undynamic duo at which half the world poked fun — about lowering some tax or another or shit, the economy was a mess, the exports had plummeted, major domestic banks were avoided on the financial markets like the plague, unemployment remained high and if anything rising, wages remained low, and without all those soup … read more
(Too pissed off of the universe to add links right now, also need to run some PCR 2mo’. Maybe l8r.)
A month as uneventful as it was full of summer heat and monochrome karma.
Kim the Lesser’s guys have assembled some more rockets in NKorea and are showing off. Everybody is pissed, except the NKoreans, who are partly elated and partly… … I don’t expect it to matter to their daily lives too much.
Peace in Sri Lanka? I fear not — though … read more
Back to Part 1
And then the topic turned to a plane that was flying in a no-fly zone near to Camp David and heading towards Site R. I had no idea what Site R was. And to me Camp David was a place where George Bush went on vacation. I didn’t know any more than that.
And now the topic is getting really interesting. As will become clear, this plane is most likely Flight United 93.
BR: And this was information … read more
since, oh IONO… mid-September 2001 perhaps?
Maybe. Maybe not. We shall see.
Until then, thanks to the 9/11 conspi folks for their continuous asinine lobbying; had they chosen to fight that what the shruBskis were in fact perpetrating, the world might very very well habe been spared 4 more years that were mostly like gang raping for virginity. Oh, and also many “thanks” for making the pretty flowers grow (and the corals — as well as others — die).
You guys suck. Some … read more
My name is Hartmut Mehdorn, and my 'soul' is 100% 34CrNiMo6 steel.
Mehdorn[de:] offers to step down.
Finally.
I cannot be polite here. This man is, or was, the human equivalent to a really huge pile of shit, fecal matter of all different colours and flavas rolled into one.
He was a Schröder plant, replacing Lacklustre Ludewig[de:]. Ludewig was Kohl’s man, second in the post since German Rail was formally privatized in ‘94 (though as of yet hasn’t IPO’d due to stauch resistance of … read more
via the good anonymi at 4chan.
Indices bounced back, jerking, stuttering up steeply — about as steep as they, on average, had fallen throughout most of February, though the volatility is decidedly less. The DJIA has already made good 50% of its Feb loss; the N225 goes alongside.
The DAX, which performed marginally better (IIRC) then is more equivocal. The gov’t is taking its tiiiiiiiime[de:] as regards HRE; they think about having made their mind up whether to exercise their damn[de:] constitutional … read more
…not really. But the difference is about as much as fluctuation, with Citi stock dropping to about a buck a hit.
And yet[de:]: all the humans in the world legally entitled to conduct business could not own it yet, if each gave this one buck.
Indices bouncyballed, with the dax very tenderly raising Tue but strongly Wed - only to lose all and more today. Dow got a huge load of flak. It looks like the Dax is gonna take cover … read more
Now, here we have a document titled
NATO IN AFGHANISTAN
MASTER NARRATIVE AS AT 6 October 2008
A bit obsolete, but nonetheless… It is part of a batch of documents liberated by the good people at Wikileaks. As they dryly remark,
The encryption password is progress, which perhaps reflects the Pentagon’s desire to stay on-message, even to itself.
Said “password” also “encrypted” the three other documents. Note that Wikileaks is intelligent enough not to submit the password of one Chris Riley, to whom the … read more
As staple rice, I prefer the nondescript parboiled rice you get in kilo packs in the supermarkets over here. I have no idea where it comes from, what cultivar it is, and so on. It has a good combination of keeping fresh and being healthy (for a carb staple). I sometimes don’t like rice, so I eat something else as carb staple, taters or pasta or whatnot. Brown rice would start to spoil under such conditions ever so often, so … read more
“[... Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant will be operational by 2009 ...]”
Spokesman Mohsen Delavizi, Atomic Energy Organization of Iran. November 18th 2008
n-tv gives some details[de:] IRNA lacks; I have no idea where they got it from. Al-Jazeera does not carry the news yet. Neither does CNN. In any case, the Germans claim that they’re doing final outfitting in Bushehr as of now and adds a “we hope” before the quote above.
I observe: there is not a cratered landscape littered with debris … read more
The Wall Street Journal has a rather strict access policy to its archives. Regarding a particularly fascinating piece from some 40 days ago, you will need archival access, which is for example unavailable on the sometimes-helpful BugMeNot.
But you can access WSJ archival material via many university libraries. And in this day and age, there is likely to be a helpful student around in the States or the EU or or China or India or Indonesia or Russia or Brazil … read more
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